Definite Atonement in Biblical, Historical, Theological, and Pastoral Perspective
- ch. 1. David and Johnny Gibson’s introduction
- chs. 12–13. Johnny Gibson’s meticulous exegesis of Paul’s letters
- ch. 14. Tom Schreiner on “problematic texts” in the pastoral and general epistles
- ch. 19. Steve Wellum’s “The New Covenant Work of Christ: Priesthood, Atonement, and Intercession.” The Gibson brothers say this about Wellum’s chapter in their introduction: “Stephen Wellum presents an argument for the priestly nature of Christ’s atoning work which reflects new covenant theology understandings of the nature of covenant, election, and ecclesiology. His rich theological thinking leads the reader to see the reality of definite atonement in the Scriptures, but the particular route he takes through the biblical terrain is different from our own classically Reformed understanding of the nature of covenant, election, and ecclesiology. The book maps different routes to the same destination, and not all readers will want to travel each and every path in reaching the same goal” (p. 40n21). I think Wellum’s route and synthesis is more compelling.
- ch. 23. John Piper’s concluding chapter addresses how to preach definite atonement, and along the way he refutes the multiple-intentions view that Bruce Ware, Mark Driscoll, and others hold. Here’s an excerpt from Piper’s chapter (p. 640):
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